TexasPilot
Member
- Joined
- May 29, 2007
- Posts
- 9
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Bum gouge, as a hiring manager I would be much more impressed with the Caravan PIC than I would be with more RJ SIC. Having hired a few Caravan drivers, who now all have their choice in jobs, CA at Air Canada, Corp pilot at a Fortune 10 company and DC-9 Captain with JUS.IMHO at this stage of your career Caravan time is a huge step backwards. It checks a box on an application but will leave most interviewers scratching their heads, and trying to figure out what went wrong at Eagle that you had to leave to go hang out with a bunch of 500 hour wonderkids flying XL Cessna 172s.
You should be looking for something that will give you PIC in a multi-engine turbine with a crew. King Air or better, or stay where you are.
Bum gouge, as a hiring manager I would be much more impressed with the Caravan PIC than I would be with more RJ SIC. Having hired a few Caravan drivers, who now all have their choice in jobs now, Ca at Air Canada, Fortune 10 comapny and DC-9 Captainn.
Too early to even make QOL a consideration in the next job.
You mean like the mis-fits who have come here, built time and moved on to DAL, NWA, SWA, FedEx, Atlas, UPS, AirTran, Jetblue, NJ, etc. Like the mis-fit who came here after going to one of the military academies, or came to us out of military flight training, or had been furloughed by a major. Those kind of misfits?No offense YIP, but you are not typical. And you are/were hiring for a night freight outfit which, not to put too fine a point on it, likes to hire misfits that aren't going anywhere else too soon. And if I was in the OP's shoes I wouldn't be looking for two more steps to a major, I'd be looking for one step.
I just helped one of my students and a business partner buy a king air f-90 yesterday. They want to send me to Sim Com for training, is there other options? I expected about 250-500 hours a year flight time in the f-90, I really lucked out on this one!!!
Single-engine TPIC in a viper or harrier = competitive
SE TPIC in a Van, Pilatus, etc = not so competitive...there are a lot of RJ guys with ME TPIC, glass cockpit, 121 experience.
Most major airlines will allow SE TPIC, but that's really only for the fighter guys. As always, exceptions will be made for those who are very well connected.
Have to disagree, PIC is still the premier resume fluff. I have seen too many people move from Caravan to places like SWA, Air Canada, and NJ, of course after passing through JUS.Glass time is the new thing interview boards are looking at. (ease of training) The caravan is a dead end.
Agreed but as far as I know, he is not making the choice between ME PIC and SE PIC. He making a choice to get PIC, of which it appears he has little. It is a stepping stone and he should not by-pass it to continue getting more SIC time. He is not signing on for a career in teh Caravan, only a chance to build time that is more meaning ful than SIC time.There is absolutley no reason for a person with his expereince to go back and fly a Caravan at this point.................. ............. ................................... The key to this career is finding the most direct route to your end goal, while having fun along the way. There will be plenty of chances in his career to go backwards...
good post, now let me ask this, are you a better pilot because of the time you spent as a PIC in the Caravan?Hey, my .02 is a slightly different take on the same problem:
flying a Caravan (I did it for 2 years and it was a blast) = Part 135
Part 135 = waaaaay higher risks to your certificate, due to the nature of the operations, the fact that you don't have the support of Mx, dispatchers etc (in Part 135 the PIC is the ONLY person responsible for the airplane: if Mx misses an AD or does not document it accurately, YOU my friend are on the hook-- as opposed to checking that there is a signature on a Mx release that clears you from any responsibility)
This is without even adding to the mix the shady nature of many, many Part 134.5 operators... there are a few good ones and plenty bad ones.
I mention this because you really need to be aware of this extra risk, it completely changes the equation. This has nothing to do with safety of flight, I'm sure you are a sh!t hot pilot, it has to do with safety of career...
hope this helps...
As far as resume etc, is concerned, nothing is evaluated in a vacuum. If ALL you have is Caravan TPIC, and nothing else that is interesting, then you would prob not be very competitive. But if you have that on top of jet SIC with eagle, maybe some Crj700 time (foreign carriers like EK make a big deal out of >30 tonnes for some reason) and a story to go with your decision, I think it would be an asset.
good luck
good post, now let me ask this, are you a better pilot because of the time you spent as a PIC in the Caravan?